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BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — The third child pulled from a family's minivan along with the driver after it rolled into a park pond died at a hospital Thursday, leaving no survivors of what authorities say was a terrible accident.

Six-year-old Jayden Wilson, the driver's nephew, had been in critical condition Thursday morning at Yale-New Haven Hospital. He died just before 2 p.m., hospital spokesman Mark D'Antonio said.

Jayden's aunt Michelle McIntosh, 39, of Bridgeport, had stopped the minivan Wednesday morning to talk with friends in another car about where to set up their holiday picnic at Beardsley Park, police said.

After she stepped out, the van began to roll. McIntosh chased it and was dragged for a short distance, losing her shoes as she climbed in and tried to stop the vehicle, police said. It rolled 60 or 70 yards down a steep hill and into a pond, where it was submerged in 15 to 20 feet of water for up to 25 minutes.

McIntosh died along with her 2-year-old son, David McIntosh, and 3-year-old Julia Boyd, a family friend.

"All of the evidence we have at this point definitely points to it as an unfortunate, horrible accident," Bridgeport police Capt. Lynn Kerwin said.

'Numb’The Bridgeport police scuba team pulled the victims out and rescuers tried to revive them before they were taken to hospitals.

He said his wife planned to come back and get him and their other children at the house, less than a mile from the park, after finding a picnic spot.

Douglas Healey
/
AP

Bridgeport, Conn., police investigate Wednesday's van accident.

Mechanics were evaluating the van Thursday to determine whether it was in gear, whether the emergency brake was activated and other factors, police said. With no survivors, family members were left to speculate about what might have happened.

Michelle McIntosh's mother, Veronica Plummer, said 2-year-old David was a bright, energetic boy who had a fascination with pretending to drive. The boy's father said his son sometimes got out of his car seat.

"Probably one of the kids was eager to get out of the car and touched the gear or something," David McIntosh said.

A 'sweetheart'Fire Battalion Chief Ismael Pomales said people nearby tried unsuccessfully to stop the van, and that fire personnel were not able to reach those trapped inside.

Leonara Henry, Julia Boyd's aunt, said Julia's mother jumped in the lake but it was too dark to find the van. The little girl was a "sweetheart," she said.